Author Topic: Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics  (Read 1507 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Flipside

  • əp!sd!l£
  • 212
Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-20731973

Basically, a device that allows a paralyzed woman to control a robot arm with a surprising degree of dexterity via chips implanted into her brain. Fascinating stuff :)

 

Offline Dragon

  • Citation needed
  • 212
  • The sky is the limit.
Re: Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics
I once met a guy who works on this sort of tech. Wheelchair controls, mostly, but I imagine that's similar in it's workings. And who says Polish never invented anything? :) I don't remember the details now though, and I can't quote any concrete sources (we only talked about it for a while).
What I find really exciting is the perspective of connecting this tech with a powered exoskeleton. Getting paralyzed could go from being a life sentence to a somewhat costly inconvenience. All this within our lifetime, the tech's already there, it just needs to become cheaper.

 

Offline Thaeris

  • Can take his lumps
  • 211
  • Away in Limbo
Re: Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics
I'm not sure who started "the Polish are useless" meme, but it's just as offensive as verbal assaults on the Jews.

That aside, I've heard of these before. Although I'm pleased to know this helps people, I'm still far more hopeful for medical science in which we re-grow tissue to repair the nervous system.
"trolls are clearly social rejects and therefore should be isolated from society, or perhaps impaled."

-Nuke



"Look on the bright side, how many release dates have been given for Doomsday, and it still isn't out yet.

It's the Duke Nukem Forever of prophecies..."


"Jesus saves.

Everyone else takes normal damage.
"

-Flipside

"pirating software is a lesser evil than stealing but its still evil. but since i pride myself for being evil, almost anything is fair game."


"i never understood why women get the creeps so ****ing easily. i mean most serial killers act perfectly normal, until they kill you."


-Nuke

 

Offline Nuke

  • Ka-Boom!
  • 212
  • Mutants Worship Me
Re: Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics
ive done some telepresence stuff with robots, its kind of disorienting. i wish i could stick the system in my r/c helicopter, but alas its very short range.

i wonder how the control system deals with feedback. its very easy to map out a small region of neural activity to a robot, its another to provide usable neural feedback. i also wonder if you can electronically bypass spinal cord injuries, rather than sending the impulses to a robot to send them to other chips connected to nerves that control the disconnected musculature.
« Last Edit: December 17, 2012, 06:55:59 pm by Nuke »
I can no longer sit back and allow communist infiltration, communist indoctrination, communist subversion, and the international communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.

Nuke's Scripting SVN

 

Offline Black Wolf

  • Twisted Infinities
  • 212
  • Hey! You! Get off-a my cloud!
    • Visit the TI homepage!
Re: Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics
I'm not sure who started "the Polish are useless" meme, but it's just as offensive as verbal assaults on the Jews.

That aside, I've heard of these before. Although I'm pleased to know this helps people, I'm still far more hopeful for medical science in which we re-grow tissue to repair the nervous system.

Dragon is Polish, he's allowed to be offensive. :p
TWISTED INFINITIES · SECTORGAME· FRONTLINES
Rarely Updated P3D.
Burn the heretic who killed F2S! Burn him, burn him!!- GalEmp

 

Offline Flipside

  • əp!sd!l£
  • 212
Re: Interesting development in Mind-Controlled Robotics
ive done some telepresence stuff with robots, its kind of disorienting. i wish i could stick the system in my r/c helicopter, but alas its very short range.

i wonder how the control system deals with feedback. its very easy to map out a small region of neural activity to a robot, its another to provide usable neural feedback. i also wonder if you can electronically bypass spinal cord injuries, rather than sending the impulses to a robot to send them to other chips connected to nerves that control the disconnected musculature.

I've actually heard something not dissimilar to this being discussed recently during my IT Degree, a kind of 'modem' that skipped damaged nerve sections, in fact, even with all the advances of late, there's still a strong chance that kind of technology will be common before mind controlled prosthetics are. This is because, as one of the Team put it, "We don't have to worry what the signals mean, just about where they go."

This was actually suggested to be used in conjunction with stem-cell treatment to regrow the damaged nerve-clusters.